118 N.J. Eq. 189 | N.J. Ct. of Ch. | 1935
Complainant sues her former husband on an agreement made between them while they were man and wife, and during the pendency of a divorce suit in this court. For a valuable consideration the defendant agreed, among other things, to pay complainant $10,000 per annum during her life in equal monthly installments beginning with the entry of a final decree in the divorce suit. Complainant prays specific performance of the agreement and especially that defendant be decreed to pay her the sum of $11,900 which is in arrears. Defendant has answered and complainant now moves to strike the answer.
The answer consists of a general answer, three separate defenses and a counter-claim. By the general answer, all the allegations of the bill are admitted except the averment that complainant has performed the terms of the contract on her part and that defendant has failed to make the payments specified in the contract. The affidavits submitted on the motion show that this denial is sham.
The first separate defense is that the agreement was collusively entered into in order to facilitate the procurement by complainant of a decree for divorce. Complainant's affidavit denies collusion, but defendant swears to the contrary and so raises an issue of fact which can be decided only after final hearing. The defense, if proved, is good. Dennison v.Dennison,
Again, complainant presents on this motion the record of judgments obtained by her in New York on this contract, for earlier installments than those which she now seeks to recover. She contends that defendant is estopped from asserting the defenses which he has pleaded in the present case. According to established practice, to secure the benefit of the judgments, she should have pleaded them. Water Commissioners v. Cramer,
"The scope of the estoppel of a judgment depends upon whether the question arises in a subsequent action between the same parties upon the same claim or demand or upon a different claim or demand. In the former case, a judgment upon the merits is an absolute bar to the subsequent action. In the latter, the inquiry is whether the point or question to be determined in the latter action is the same as that litigated and determined in the original action." Miller v. Stieglitz,
In a second suit between the same parties for a different cause of action, only those matters within the issues actually litigated and determined in the first suit are res judicata.Nagle v. Conard,
In one of the New York actions Mrs. Phillips took judgment by default. It is sometimes said that a judgment by default is conclusive in a second suit, on another cause of action, as to the material facts well pleaded in the complaint upon which the default judgment was based. Certainly the estoppel is no broader.34 C.J. 892. A narrower statement of the estoppel is contained in Cromwell v. Sac County,
In the second New York suit, the only issue raised was whether the installment for June, 1932, had fallen due under *193 the contract when the suit was brought; none of the defenses raised in the present suit was pleaded or considered.
Neither New York judgment estops defendant from relying upon his first separate defense or upon his other defenses considered below.
The second defense reads as follows:
"The agreement upon which specific performance and the decree of this court for the payment of money is sought, is, in so far as the provisions thereof relate to the payment of $10,000 per year during the life of the complainant, an agreement respecting alimony, support and maintenance of the complainant, made during the time when divorce proceedings were pending between them in the State of New Jersey; such agreement was entered into without the consent or approval of this court; the terms and conditions thereof have not been approved by this court; the terms and conditions thereof in so far as they require the payment of $10,000 per year to the complainant during her life are unfair, inequitable and unjust in so far as defendant is concerned. Said terms and conditions were and are also unsuitable and improper for the support of the complainant, were and are greatly in excess of her just needs and demands, and were and are far beyond the power and ability of the defendant to comply therewith. Defendant was and is unable to comply therewith and says that by reason thereof, it is inequitable that said agreement should be enforced or that defendant be decreed to comply therewith."
Contracts between husband and wife, void at law, are good in equity if fair and fairly obtained. Wood v. Chetwood,
None of the cases already cited arose upon a separation agreement or an agreement to pay alimony, but they disclose clearly the nature and effect of executory contracts between husband and wife. If they were fairly obtained, they are enforceable in equity to the extent that they are fair. In determining whether a contract was fairly obtained, the court is watchful for indications of undue influence and coercion. In deciding whether the contract is fair, the court examines carefully the consideration. Ireland v. Ireland,
The earliest of our cases on a contract to pay alimony isCalame v. Calame,
Next comes another opinion of Beasley, Aspinwall v.Aspinwall,
The Aspinwall decision was followed in Mockridge v.Mockridge,
A case which at first glance seems to run counter to our other authorities is Apfelbaum v. Apfelbaum,
While the opinion does not set forth the prayer of the bill, it is evident that Mrs. Apfelbaum sought a decree for the future performance of the agreement, rather than a judgment for the arrears. Otherwise the court would not have suggested that her proper remedy was an application for alimony. The rule remains unaffected that a wife may recover in equity the amount due and unpaid on her husband's agreement to pay separate maintenance or alimony, provided the agreement was fairly obtained and is fair. *196
The second defense alleges that the contract is unfair. In resisting the motion to strike, defendant presents an affidavit which amplifies the defense; he states that due to a change in his own financial situation, the payment of $10,000 a year has become a great hardship to him.
In Buttlar v. Buttlar,
The defense that a change of circumstances has made the bargain a hard one, as applied to an ordinary specific performance suit was fully expounded by Vice-Chancellor Pitney in Keim v.Lindley, 30 Atl. Rep. 1063 (at p. 1084). He states "the general and familiar rule that the fairness of a contract must be judged of, as matters stood at its date." This rule has been repeatedly followed in suits by a wife on a separation agreement and it has uniformly been held that hardship or inability to perform arising from a chance in the husband's circumstances, is not a valid defense. Vandegrift v. Vandegrift,
The other branch of the second defense is that the contract was made without the approval of the court. Here, defendant relies onSobel v. Sobel,
The third defense which is in the nature of a demurrer, states that the bill does not show an equitable cause of action. To this I cannot agree.
By way of counter-claim, the defendant repeats the allegations of this second defense already quoted and prays that the court may revise and modify the agreement between the parties so as to provide for such payments as are equitable, just and fair. If a contract is the product of fraud, mistake, coercion, or the like, a court of equity may annul it. If, through mistake, it does not state the real agreement, the court may reform it; but the court cannot make a contract for the parties or revise their agreement. Contracts arise only from the voluntary acts of the parties. The counter-claim alleges no facts which may be a basis for reformation or other equitable relief. Let the counter-claim and the answer, except the first separate defense, be stricken. *198